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<blockquote data-quote="Jfdlsjfd" data-source="post: 9151772" data-attributes="member: 42856"><p>Also, someone mentionned not having a lot of control on the output. Honestly, they <em>could</em>. But it would require getting the generated image and having an AI trained on NSFW images to detect if the generation is OK or not for general viewing. It is something that can be done. From what I understand, it is a way of training the models by having an adversarial AI identify the good outcomes from the bad. But training requires a lot more computing power than just infering images, so I doubt they can afford to run such a system with both great efficiency and very short generational time.</p><p></p><p>For Stable Diffusion installed at home you can do things with the SDXL model with 8 GB of VRAM and a card starting at GTX 30x0 series. But it will push your machine to its limit. The older, SD models, especially the fine-tuned ones, can give good results with much lower requirements. Avoid AMD graphic cards at the moment (it's just not optimized and it will take agonizingly long time to generate an image). </p><p></p><p>ATM, I think the best use is to get a good image from D3 as a starting point, with basic prompt, and improve the details (like faces, when they all come up as clones in D3) and remove the odd things like I had once where one of "the students taking notes" in a magical university was taking notes on a Macbook. This "touch up" work is easier on hardware. Also, the strength of SD is the large amount of fine-tuned models and "extensions" to models. While a lot of them are NSFW by design, and others are just... odd (there is an extension to turn characters into the texture of croissants, what the...) you can get very good specialized results (like differentiating among the kind of elves by loading an extension that teaches that HouseElf is a word, associated with the Potter imagery, while DDElf is another valid word, pointing toward our more regular elves. </p><p></p><p>Also, many tool for composing the scene, but I think starting from D3 is probably easier.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Jfdlsjfd, post: 9151772, member: 42856"] Also, someone mentionned not having a lot of control on the output. Honestly, they [I]could[/I]. But it would require getting the generated image and having an AI trained on NSFW images to detect if the generation is OK or not for general viewing. It is something that can be done. From what I understand, it is a way of training the models by having an adversarial AI identify the good outcomes from the bad. But training requires a lot more computing power than just infering images, so I doubt they can afford to run such a system with both great efficiency and very short generational time. For Stable Diffusion installed at home you can do things with the SDXL model with 8 GB of VRAM and a card starting at GTX 30x0 series. But it will push your machine to its limit. The older, SD models, especially the fine-tuned ones, can give good results with much lower requirements. Avoid AMD graphic cards at the moment (it's just not optimized and it will take agonizingly long time to generate an image). ATM, I think the best use is to get a good image from D3 as a starting point, with basic prompt, and improve the details (like faces, when they all come up as clones in D3) and remove the odd things like I had once where one of "the students taking notes" in a magical university was taking notes on a Macbook. This "touch up" work is easier on hardware. Also, the strength of SD is the large amount of fine-tuned models and "extensions" to models. While a lot of them are NSFW by design, and others are just... odd (there is an extension to turn characters into the texture of croissants, what the...) you can get very good specialized results (like differentiating among the kind of elves by loading an extension that teaches that HouseElf is a word, associated with the Potter imagery, while DDElf is another valid word, pointing toward our more regular elves. Also, many tool for composing the scene, but I think starting from D3 is probably easier. [/QUOTE]
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